Browsing by Author "Arline, Kenneth"
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Item R-Line Features: State Constitutions I.(UNPUBLISHED, 1955) Arline, KennethDiscusses the difference between the states' constitutions and the right states have to write constitutions, despite the criticism they get. "Fifty laboratories experimenting in the science of government. Collectively they comprise the United States of America. Separately no two are exactly alike. Their constitutions spell out the differences." First in the series; all have been digitized.Item R-Line Features: State Constitutions II.(UNPUBLISHED, 1955) Arline, KennethSecond in the series. All have been digitized. This one discusses constitutional conventions and whether they are required or not.Item R-Line Features: State Constitutions III.(UNPUBLISHED, 1955) Arline, KennethThird in the series. All of the series has been digitized. Information given on preambles in this one. Constitutions of Vermont and West Virginia have no preamble. Also discussed is differences in format.Item R-Line Features: State Constitutions IV.(UNPUBLISHED, 1955) Arline, KennethFourth in the series. All have been digitized. This one is about the amount of authority granted to governors by the different state constitutions.Item R-Line Features: State Constitutions V.(UNPUBLISHED, 1955) Arline, KennethFifth in the series. All have been digitized. This one has to do with differences in the judicial sections of the states' constitutions, especially selection of judges.Item R-Line Features: State Constitutions VI.(UNPUBLISHED, 1955) Arline, KennethSixth in the series. All have been digitized. This one is about the different names of the states' lawmaking body, and the differences between them.Item R-Line Features: State Constitutions VII.(UNPUBLISHED, 1955) Arline, KennethSeventh in the series. All have been digitized. This one is about the differences between the states' constitutions "provisions for correcting either sins of commission, omission or both."Item R-Line Features: State Constitutions VIII.(UNPUBLISHED, 1955) Arline, KennethLast in the series of eight. All have been digitized. This one discusses the reason state constitutions are looked upon critically. "One reason state constitutions generally are beset with so many faults is the 'need for the use of fundamental law to do some rather unfundamental thing,' according to Dr. Bruce Mason and Dr. Heinz R. Hink, of Arizona State University."